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Book Cover
Book
Author Hamilton, Shane, 1976-

Title The Kitchen Debate and Cold War consumer politics : a brief history with documents / Shane Hamilton, Sarah Phillips
Published Boston : Bedford st martin's, [2014]
Boston Bedford/St. Martin's, [2014]
©2014

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  327.73047 Ham/Kda  AVAILABLE
Description xv, 171 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Series The Bedford series in history and culture
Bedford series in history and culture.
Contents Contents note continued: 35.Reflections on the American Exhibition, August 23, 1959 / Marietta Shaginian -- 36.Is There a Science of the Home?, October 1964 / A. Sikachev -- 4.Down on the Farm -- Abundance and Rivalry -- 37.Farmer Khrushchev, August 10, 1959 / Edmund K. Faltermayer -- 38.Speech in Des Moines, Iowa, September 22, 1959 / Nikita Khrushchev -- The Problems of Plenty -- 39.Speech on the Farm Problem and the Policy Choices, February 1958 / John Kenneth Galbraith -- 40.The Farmer in the Space Age, October 7, 1959 / Erwin D. Canham -- Agricultural Diplomacy -- 41.Memo to the President re Tour of the Soviet Union, July 30, 1963 / Orville Freeman -- 42.U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, The Significance of Four Million Tons of U.S. Wheat for Food Consumption in the USSR, October 15, 1963 -- 43.U.S. Information Agency, Khrushchev in Wheat Field, August 1964 -- Appendixes -- A Chronology of the Kitchen Debate and Cold War Consumer Politics (1941--1964) --
Contents note continued: Questions for Consideration -- Selected Bibliography
Contents note continued: Socialist Consumer Citizens -- 22.Report on Purchasing Power of Soviet Workers, 1953 / Edmund Nash -- 23.Speech on the 1959 Soviet Seven-Year Economic Plan, January 1959 / Nikita Khrushchev -- 24.Speech on Communist Youth and Consumerism, January 1959 / V. Ye. Semichastny -- 25.A Soviet Woman Questions Consumerism, 1962 -- 3.An Easier Life for Our Housewives -- A Servantless Kitchen? -- 26.Lita Price and Harriet Bonnet, How to Manage without a Maid, 1942 -- 27.Goodbye Mammy, Hello Mom, March 1947 -- 28.You Have 1001 Servants in Your Kitchen, March 1951 / Jean Harris -- 29.Whether You Build, Buy or Modernize, 1953 / Youngstown Kitchens -- 30.The Can-Opener Cookbook, 1952 / Poppy Cannon -- 31.Revolution in the Kitchen, February 15, 1957 -- 32.The I Hate to Cook Book, 1960 / Peg Bracken -- Socialist Kitchens -- 33.The Woman in Soviet Life, March 1959 / Maria Ovsyannikova -- 34.Technology on the March, 1959 / R. Podol'nyi --
Contents note continued: 8.What the Facts Say, July 28, 1959 / V.I. Zhukov -- 9.Home Economist Demonstrates Convenience Foods, July 1959 -- 10.The Miracle Kitchen, March 1959 / Robert Lerner -- 11.Everything for Soviet Man, August 5, 1959 -- Responses to Nixon's Visit -- 12.U.S. Diplomat's Telegram on the American National Exhibition, September 8, 1959 / Edward L. Freers -- 13.Favorable Comments on Exhibition, September 1959 -- 14.Unfavorable Comments on Exhibition, September 1959 -- 15.On Nixon's Visit to the Urals, July 31, 1959 / Ye. Litoshko -- 16.Boy, Did He Tell Them Off!, July 26, 1959 / Bill Mauldin -- 17.Speech in Dnepropetrovsk, July 28, 1959 / Nikita Khrushchev -- 2.Consumers and Consensus -- Capitalist Consumer Citizens -- 18.Why We Eat Better, November 1951 / Alex Henderson -- 19.Speech on Modern Food Distribution, October 20, 1958 / John A. Logan -- 20.The Affluent Society, 1958 / John Kenneth Galbraith -- 21.Split-Level Living, March 9, 1960 / Herblock --
Machine generated contents note: pt. ONE Introduction: The Kitchen Debate in Historical Context -- The Cold War, Containment, and "Peaceful Competition" -- The Politics of Abundance -- The Culture of Containment -- The Politics of Food and Farms -- pt. TWO The Documents -- 1.The Kitchen Debate -- Selling the American Way -- 1.U.S. Ambassador's Telegram on Plans for the American National Exhibition, November 17, 1958 / Llewellyn E. Thompson -- 2.Office of the American National Exhibition in Moscow, Kitchens of Today and Tomorrow Slated for Moscow Exhibition, February 9, 1959 -- 3.Office of the American National Exhibition in Moscow, Cooking Display in Moscow to Feature American Dishes, May 13, 1959 -- 4.Letter to President Dwight Eisenhower, July 10, 1959 / Jerry Marlatt -- Nixon Goes to Moscow -- 5.The Two Worlds: A Day-Long Debate, July 25, 1959 -- 6.A Talk to the Point, July 25, 1959 / Ye. Litoshko -- 7.First Day, First Impressions, July 26, 1959 / V. Osipov --
Summary Materials ancillary to the "debate" or exchanges between Richard M. Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev at the American National Exhibition in Moscow in 1959
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich, 1894-1971.
Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994.
SUBJECT American National Exhibition (1959 : Moscow, Russia) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n94075289
Subject Cold War -- Social aspects.
Consumption (Economics) -- Soviet Union -- History.
Consumption (Economics) -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
SUBJECT USSR -- Economic conditions -- 1955-1965. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85125728
USSR -- Social conditions -- 1945-1991. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85125856
United States -- Economic conditions -- 1945- http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140024
USSR -- Foreign relations -- United States. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85125763
United States -- Foreign relations -- Soviet Union. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140115
United States -- Social conditions -- 1945- http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140518
Author Phillips, Sarah T., 1974-
LC no. 2014451144
ISBN 0312677103 (paperback)
9780312677107 (paperback)